ST. LOUIS – Jon Jay did not pick up a bat while missing five succes­sive games with a sore wrist. Once he returned onTuesday, the St. Louis out­fielder quickly made up for lost time.

Jay hit an RBI single with two outs in the eighth inning to break a tie and lead the Cardinals to a 3-2 win over the Boston Red Sox in a battle between the two World Series teams from last fall.

“It just felt great to be back out there,” Jay said. “Even better to come through.”

The Cardinals won their third in a row and fourth in the last five. Boston has lost three in a row.

Jay blooped a hit to left off reliever Junichi Tazawa (1-3) to bring in former Red Sox A.J. Pier­zynski with the winning run.

All-Star reliever Pat Neshek (5-0) picked up the win by striking out the side in the eighth.

St. Louis closer Trevor Rosenthal recorded his NL-leading 35th save in 39 chances.

“Today was a big day for us,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “There were great at-bats from everybody.”

Especially Jay.

“I didn’t swing at all until today,” Jay said.“But it feels good.”

St. Louis starter Lance Lynn gave up two runs on four hits over seven innings. Boston starter Rubby De La Rosa surrendered one run on six hits over six innings.

Pierzynski started the winning rally with a two-out hit. He was signed by the Cardinals on July 26 after being released by the Red Sox on July 16.

“Everyone wants me to say bad things about the Red Sox and I’m not going to do that,” Pierzynski said. “I’m not bitter about what happened. It just didn’t work. I don’t have one hard feeling. The only thing is I didn’t play well enough. I have nothing but respect for the organization and how they handled everything. I was proud to say I was a Red Sox.”

Oscar Taveras followed Pierzyn­ski’s hit with a single to set the stage for Jay. “They did a good job of putting the bat on the ball,” Boston man­ager John Farrell said of the Car­dinals. “It seemed like Junichi had the eighth inning well in hand with two out, two strikes and nobody on.Three consecutive base hits and that was the difference.”

Only 13 players remain from the Red Sox 25-man roster that won the World Series last fall. Through trades and attrition, the average age of the team dropped from 31 on Opening Day, to 28 on Tuesday.

The Red Sox have recalled knuckleball specialist Steven Wright from Triple-A Pawtucket. Wright will be making his first stint on the roster this season after four appearances last year.